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Report Finds RFID Chips Causes Medical Equipment to Fail

A report published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, suggests RFID chips could cause some medical devices to fail when in close contact. Radio frequency identification chips are used for corporate inventory tracking, library management and even passport data control. The chips are also used to power transit payment systems, animal identification and theft control. More recently, some hospitals have begun using the technology to monitor medical products and other hospital resources.

In the US health providers are reportedly spending $90m a year on RFID systems – an amount expected to more than double in the coming decade, according to the study’s authors.

“It’s become more popular in the last 12 to 18 months,” Dan Mullen, president of the Association for Automatic Identification and Mobility, said. Mullen’s organisation acts as the international trade association for manufacturers of RFID technology. “They’re starting to crop up in terms of asset tracking – primarily applications where they’re trying to know where equipment is. It can be utilising a WiFi network to locate equipment in most cases,” he said.

The study has focused around radio frequencies sent out by the chips. Past research found such waves in electronic anti-theft systems can interfere with certain pacemakers and defibrillators, so the authors wanted to see if hospital-based medical devices would be affected in a similar way.

Scientists set up two different kinds of RFID devices inside an empty intensive care unit room. They measured whether electromagnetic interference from the chips was reaching 41 nearby medical devices, ranging from pacemakers to dialysis systems. The researchers found 22 “hazardous” incidences of interference. These included, they say, ventilators switching off or changing rates, syringe pumps stopping, external pacemakers malfunctioning, and kidney replacement devices shutting down.

Fear not though: Most equipment affected was all within a foot of the RFID chips – much of it less than 10 inches away. The likelihood of RFID chips being placed within such a short range of hospital equipment, Mullen said is probably not high.

“It’s important to understand the interaction and the distance,” Mullen noted. “I don’t think there’s any need to panic. RFID is starting to hit more mainstream applications, and as it does so, it might interact in the hospital environment in different ways. It’s a good thing to study that,” he said.

The study’s authors did not recommend removing or banning the RFID technology from hospitals, noting that it does have a strong potential to help healthcare providers. They did, however, suggest moving forward with additional testing and efforts to create standards for how these devices should be used.

“The intensity of electronic life-supporting medical devices in this area requires careful management of the introduction of new wireless communications such as RFID,” the researchers concluded. “Implementation of RFID in the ICU and other similar healthcare environments should require on-site EMI tests in addition to updated international standards.”

Such standards may be an asset to both hospitals and the companies creating the technology – and may become a more common consideration as different kinds of electronics enter all facets of our lives.

“These sort of studies are important to understand the potential impact of any electronics in the hospital environment,” Mullen said. “Right now, I don’t see any kind of major concern. Best practices, standards, guidelines — as technology is matured and the use of it is moving forward, I think you’ll see more of those sorts of things.”

This is just a minor disadvantage of the RFID. To date, FDA has received no reports of injuries resulting from RFID although preliminary FDA testing has shown that some RFID emitters might slow the rate of pacemakers or cause implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) to give inappropriate shocks. Other electronic medical devices could also react inappropriately when in close contact with RFID.

I believe the advantage of RFID has outnumbered the disadvantage especially in the medical field because it makes sure patients receive the correct medications and medical devices and it helps in managing hospital equipments, tracking of patients providing data for electronic medical records systems.

The important thing is patients should be aware of any changes in how they feel when in the RFID environment.

Come one guys we have to remember that we are dealing with life support equipment, this should never happen in serious medical enviroment, if a medical equipment or even medical software fails, people can die… this is not just another industry, this is pretty serious.